Posted on 10/10/2012 6:44:50 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Walter Williams!
That’s why I suggested Richard W. Fisher, Inflation Hawk.
“IMHO, it is the preppers, the hoarders, and the speculators of silver, that drove Kodak out of business, being no longer able to afford silver metal to manufacture photographic film.”
Wouldn’t that have more to do with the rise of digital photography gutting the demand for film? If it was the silver prices, Kodak would have just raised the price of film and passed it along.
Kodak simply wasn’t able to produce a decent digital camera while SONY took their electronics expertise and now makes some of the best cameras there are.
You can still buy film but its expensive and goes mostly to the purists.
FedChief??????
0’pinhead’s “The Folks” seem to just assume things will go back to “business as usual” soon, and .....
Notice how the prime question is just ignored/skipped over—does the usurper just walk away scot-free?
Col Sellin is the only one I have seen who addresses this issue multiple writings advising the prime issue must be brought to a head n4 the 2012 election, but......
Semper Watching!
*****
Hee Hee, I would love to see Ron Paul clean house at the fed!
Stuart Varney.
Yes, it would be cool to have an intelligent Brit in there!
and i would love to see dr rp tell him where to stick it!!!!!
;)
Semper Watching!
*****
>> Well, if Milton Friedman were still alive <<
then he’d tell the gold bugs (like Ron Paul and company) to pound sand. Friedman was well-known for opposing a return to the gold standard.
Seconded.
The hardest job the next president will have in choosing Ben Bernanke’s replacement is finding someone foolish enough to take the job.
Unlike every other banking chairman in the world, our Federal Reserve Chairman has been given two mutually exclusive goals — maintain the value of the dollar while at the same time solving our economic-growth and unemployment problems.
This is mission impossible, yet the Fed Chairman gets blamed for everything wrong with our economy. It’s the responsibility of Congress to enact budgets that will spur growth in the economy, yet it has abdicated this responsibility and placed everything on the shoulders of the Fed Chairman.
No intelligent Atlas would accept impossible burdens, and neither would intelligent candidates for the Fed Chairmanship. So, until Congress repeals its rule that the Fed must both maintain the dollar and spur economic growth, we’ll have fools for Fed Chairmen.
They will not change a thing. You are just kidding yourself if you think there will be a change.
My pick would be John Mauldin, the investment writer, analyst and speaker. He seems to have a really good handle on economic history, the functioning of the markets, and is a strong capitalist.
The last two Republican picks were Alan Greenspan (Reagan) and Ben Bernanke (G.W. Bush). Hopefully Romney can do better.
Reality- SSDD. Keeping those printing presses and bill cutters at full speed.
Better watch it before FR’s small clique of “free trade” Wall Street arbitrageurs show up to call you an economic Neanderthal, a drooling gold bug, or tinfoil hat fashionista, hehehe....
;-)
Oh, I’ve battled them before!
Bump.
Yes, of course, but as in all things, there is always the concept of "inside baseball". In this context, it's not that anything will change, it's that people actually respond to a thread with earnest & sincere attempts at voicing "solutions".
The inside game related to this exercise is that it provides even more evidence that among the very, very small percentage of people who even understand the subject matter, so few really understand what it means.
Denninger is one of the very few - a couple of days ago he discussed the IMF paper that revealed that US balance sheet debt must go to $55T in order to keep the ponzi afloat:
http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=212499
Once you understand the math, the political equation is trivial: the debt must exponentially expand, or the game is up. As in, revolution, tanks in the street, civil war, etc.
So, tasked with the job of expanding the debt, all one must do is look around at potential asset/service classes that can be 'financialized' ie leveraged into even more debt.
We already have the MIC (perpetual global war), war on drugs (justice-industrial complex), housing, pensions, etc. If any of these were to experience cut-backs ie enter recession, it would also be game over.
So, what are the biggest demographic slices? Who owns the assets & who's gonna need them to finance their coming health care needs? What part of the economy is already experiencing rapid cost escalations, but is only getting warmed up?
Don't waste your time thinking about solutions, focus on thinking how you can get a piece of pie in order to save your own skin.
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